Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The district operates a total of 180 schools: 109 elementary, 34 middle, 23 high, 14 alternative, adult and community, intermediate, and Exceptional Student Education (ESE). It has 27,168 employees and 45,000 volunteers. Established in 1909, the district was known as the Palm Beach County Board of Public Instruction until the mid-1980s.
After counting the number of students in schools across Palm Beach County, district leaders now know whether public school enrollment has rebounded following the COVID-19 pandemic and whether a ...
Palm Beach County's high schools range in age from just six months to more than 110 years old. But whether it's new construction like Dr. Joaquín García High or a piece of local history like ...
Palm Beach Lakes Community High School, also known as Lakes or PBL, is a coeducational public high school located in the Palm Beach Lakes community of West Palm Beach, Florida. It is under the jurisdiction of the School District of Palm Beach County. The school has the Teacher's Academy Program and serves as the Law Magnet for the entire county.
Overall, Palm Beach County's school district regained its "A" status after falling to a "B" in 2023. Here's how each individual school was graded.
Forest Hill Community High School (FHCHS) also known as Forest Hill or The Hill, is a coeducational public high school in West Palm Beach, Florida with an enrollment of 2,457 students. [3] The school is a part of the School District of Palm Beach County.
Inside Palm Beach County's newest high school and the 'Bulldog Commons' The crown jewel of the high school, according to both Otero and project architect Samuel Ferreri of PGAL, is the media center.
Boca Raton Community High School is a magnet school that is part of the School District of Palm Beach County, Florida, United States. The high school has been rated an "A" school each consecutive year by the Florida Department of Education since 2005 and was ranked 62nd on the list of America's Best High Schools by Newsweek in 2010.